The First Time
Cast & Crew
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Charlie Loventhal
Director
Bill Randolph
Wendie Jo Sperber
Eva Charney
Wendy Fulton
Jane Badler
Film Details
Also Known As
First Time, Goldmine
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1982
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 35m
Synopsis
Director
Charlie Loventhal
Director
Cast
Bill Randolph
Wendie Jo Sperber
Eva Charney
Wendy Fulton
Jane Badler
Bradley Bliss
Larry Melman
Tim Choate
Wallace Shawn
Rex Robbins
Raymond Patterson
Cathryn Damon
Robert Trebor
Krista Errickson
Marshall Efron
Crew
Hillary Bailey
Casting
Ross Barnes
Consultant
Marc Bittian
Photography
J. C. Brotherhood
Key Grip
Felix Cavaliere
Song Performer
Joe Cranzano
Makeup
Brian De Palma
Creative Consultant
Lisa Dejager
Production Coordinator
Anna Delanzo
Sound
Richard Feury
Assistant Director
Steven Fierberg
Director Of Photography
William Franklin Finley
Screenplay
John Foster
Production Manager
Ellise Garber
Makeup
Ellise Garber
Hair
Michael Goodman
Assistant Director
Ken Gordon
Script Supervisor
Nicholas Gould
Hair
Robert Grimaldi
Hair
Sam Irvin
Producer
John Loggia
Special Effects
Charlie Loventhal
Screenplay
Lawrence Loventhal
Executive Producer
Lanny Meyers
Song
Lanny Meyers
Music
Mary-ann Monforton
Costumes
Raymond Patterson
Choreographer
Sara Risher
Associate Producer
Joel Rosenthal
Assistant Editor
Robert Shaye
Executive Producer
Tom Surgal
Casting
Tom Surgal
Art Director
Stanley Vogel
Editor
Susan Weiser-finley
Screenplay
Film Details
Also Known As
First Time, Goldmine
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1982
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 35m
Articles
Wendie Jo Sperber (1958-2005)
Born on September 18, 1958 in Hollywood, California, Sperber made an impression from the beginning when, at just 19 years of age, she was cast as Rosie Petrofsky, the hyperactive, dreamy-eyed Beatle fan who will stop at nothing to see them on their Ed Sullivan debut in the charming Robert Zemeckis' period comedy I Wanna Hold Your Hand (1978). The film was a surprise smash in the Spring of '78, and she proved that her comic chops were no fluke when Stephen Spielberg cast her as a lovestruck teenager in his overblown spectacle 1941 (1979); and as a naive car buyer in Zemeckis' funny Kurt Russell outing Used Cars (1980).
As hilarious as she was in those films, Sperber earned her pop culture stripes when she played Amy Cassidy in the cult comedy series Bosom Buddies (1980-82). This strange sitcom, about two pals (Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari), who dressed in drag so they could live in an all-girls residential hotel might have had a flimsy premise - but the actors played it to the hilt. Hanks and Scolari were fine, but Sperber stole the series with her incredible physical display of pratfalls, comic sprints, splits and facial mugging. Indeed, here was one comedic performer who was not afraid to go all out for a laugh. Even after the cancellation of the show, Sperber continued to work in comedies throughout the decade: Bachelor Party (1984), Moving Violations, and in Back to the Future (both 1985).
Tragically, Sperber's career was halted in 1997 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer. After a brief remission, she played a cancer survivor in a final season episode of Murphy Brown (1997-98). The warm reception she received from her appearance influenced her decision to become an active campaigner for cancer awareness and fundraising. The culmination of her humanitarian efforts resulted in 2001, when she founded weSPARK Cancer Support Center in Sherman Oaks, a nonprofit center that provides free emotional support, research information and social activities for cancer victims and their families. Despite her altruistic causes, Sperber still found time in recent years to make guest appearances on such hit television shows like Will & Grace and 8 Simple Rules...for Dating My Teenage Daughter. She is survived by a son, Preston; a daughter, Pearl; parents, Charlene and Burt; sisters, Ellice and Michelle; and a brother, Richard.
by Michael T. Toole
Wendie Jo Sperber (1958-2005)
Wendie Jo Sperber, the zany comic actress who had appeared on several movies and sitcoms since the late '70s, died on November 29 of breast cancer at her Sherman Oaks home. She was 47.
Born on September 18, 1958 in Hollywood, California, Sperber made an impression from the beginning when, at just 19 years of age, she was cast as Rosie Petrofsky, the hyperactive, dreamy-eyed Beatle fan who will stop at nothing to see them on their Ed Sullivan debut in the charming Robert Zemeckis' period comedy I Wanna
Hold Your Hand (1978). The film was a surprise
smash in the Spring of '78, and she proved that her comic chops were no fluke when Stephen Spielberg cast her as a lovestruck teenager in his overblown spectacle 1941 (1979); and as a naive car buyer in Zemeckis' funny Kurt Russell outing Used Cars (1980).
As hilarious as she was in those films, Sperber earned her pop culture stripes when she played Amy Cassidy in the cult comedy series Bosom Buddies (1980-82).
This strange sitcom, about two pals (Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari), who dressed in drag so they could live in an all-girls residential hotel might have had a flimsy premise - but the actors played it to the hilt.
Hanks and Scolari were fine, but Sperber stole the series with her incredible physical display of pratfalls, comic sprints, splits and facial mugging.
Indeed, here was one comedic performer who was not afraid to go all out for a laugh. Even after the cancellation of the show, Sperber continued to work in comedies throughout the decade: Bachelor Party (1984), Moving Violations, and in Back to the Future (both 1985).
Tragically, Sperber's career was halted in 1997 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer. After a brief remission, she played a cancer survivor in a final season episode of Murphy Brown (1997-98). The warm reception she received from her appearance influenced her decision to become an active campaigner for cancer awareness and fundraising. The culmination of her humanitarian efforts resulted in 2001, when she founded weSPARK Cancer Support Center in Sherman Oaks, a nonprofit center that provides free emotional support, research information and social activities for cancer victims and their families. Despite her altruistic causes, Sperber still found time in recent years to make guest appearances on such hit television shows like Will & Grace and 8 Simple Rules...for Dating My Teenage Daughter. She is survived by a son, Preston; a daughter, Pearl; parents, Charlene and Burt; sisters, Ellice and Michelle; and a brother, Richard.
by Michael T. Toole
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1982
Feature directorial debut for Charlie Loventhal.
Released in United States 1982